Answer:
They are very different see below for answer
Explanation:
There is a major difference between the Florida Constitution (actually, any State Constitution) and the federal Constitution.
The State Constitutions are broader in their scope as they govern the internal workings of the State. Every State is a self-contained nation that has delegated many of its international powers to a common federal agent (the federal government).
The federal constitution organizes the structure of the administrative agent of the States and directs this agency on how to administer the collective foreign (from the State’s perspective) State’s international powers. Thus the jurisdiction of the United States Government coordinates interstate relations between the Member States, as well as the international relations between the collective of States and foreign powers external to the Union. Certain internal (from the State’s perspective) powers have also been delegated to the federal agency to ensure ease of commerce and interstate relations such as ensuring all States use the same monetary unit and currency, that all States have 12 inches in a foot, 4 quarts to a gallon, that bankruptcy is handled the same way throughout the union so that a citizen of Maine can’t file for bankruptcy in Kansas because the bankruptcy laws are more favorable in Kansas than they are in Maine (compare to how people will incorporate in Delaware or Nevada rather than California or New York for instance as a comparison as to why uniform bankruptcy laws are important when it is governing the cancelation of incurred debts already made.)
State Constitutions have provisions that govern education, beneficial welfare institutions, and a number of other issues that are not found in the federal Constitution because they are outside the scope of the federal government (although in today’s world it can sometimes be hard to tell).
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